With a disappointing jobs report with just 235K new jobs added vs an estimate 750K, investors rushed back into tech which, as today’s expert put it “has become bullet-proof. It’s the anti-COVID sector” and once again out of cyclicals with the sentiment that Delta is indeed having a negative impact on the labor economy and sending the Dow down 74 points. With the labor market being key for the Fed, it meant the Fed would likely further hold on the timing of tapering, which the market wants. Yet there is some skepticism that perhaps the Fed has erred and that possibility is being priced in, quite a change from yesterday when the experts expressed great confidence in the Fed. Volume was a little below average at just under 8.4 billion.
FRI
SEPTEMBER 3, 2021 4:53 PM
Tech drives Nasdaq to record finish
but Wall Street mixed on jobs report
DJ: 35,443.82 +131.29 NAS: 15,331.18 +21.80 S&P: 4,536.95 +12.86 9/2
DJ: 35,369.09 -74.73 NAS: 15,363.52 +32.34 S&P: 4,535.43
-1.52 9/3
(Reuters)
- The Nasdaq ended Friday at a new peak but the other main Wall Street indexes
fell, reflecting the mixed sentiment stemming from a disappointing U.S. jobs report
which raised fears about the pace of economic recovery but weakened the
argument for near-term tapering. On the
final day of trading before the Labor Day weekend, both the S&P 500 and Dow
benchmark posted marginal declines, tempering the former’s positive weekly
performance and extending the latter’s run of losses to four in the last five
sessions. For the Nasdaq though,
registering a fifth win in the last six sessions and a weekly gain of 1.6%,
investors’ support of heavyweight technology stocks - which tend to perform
better in a low interest-rate environment - continues to drive it higher.
Apple, Alphabet, and Facebook all rose
between 0.3% and 0.4%. “Tech has become bullet-proof,”
said Mike Mullaney, director of global market research at Boston Partners. “It’s the anti-COVID sector, where you want to be if you think
COVID or a lack of growth is going to be an issue.” The virus, and its impact on the pace of economic recovery, was evident in the Labor
Department’s closely-watched report which showed nonfarm payrolls increased by 235,000 jobs in August,
widely missing economists’ estimate of 750,000. Payrolls had surged 1.05
million in July. “The number’s a big disappointment and it’s clear the Delta variant had
a negative impact on the labor economy this summer,” said Michael Arone,
chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors in Boston. “You can tell because leisure and hospitality
didn’t add any jobs and retail actually lost jobs. Investors will conclude that
perhaps this will put the
(Federal Reserve) further on hold in terms of the timing of tapering. Markets
may be okay with that.”
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq had
scaled all-time highs over the past few weeks on support from robust corporate
earnings, but investors have remained generally cautious as they watch economic
indicators and the jump in U.S. infections to see how that might influence the
Fed and its tapering plans. The labor market remains the key
touchstone for the Fed, with Chair Jerome Powell hinting last week that
reaching full employment was a pre-requisite for the central bank to start
paring back its asset purchases.
Among the biggest decliners on the
S&P 500 were cruise ship operators, whose businesses are highly susceptible
to consumer sentiment around travel and COVID-19. Norwegian Cruise Line
Holdings, Carnival Corp and Royal Caribbean Cruises all fell between 3.4% and
4.4%. A majority of the 11 S&P
sectors closed down, with the utilities index the worst performer at 0.8%
lower. Economically-sensitive manufacturing and industrials slipped 0.7% and
0.6% respectively. Banking stocks, which
generally perform better when bond yields are higher, dropped 0.4% even as the
benchmark 10-year Treasury yield jumped following the report. [US/] “I get the overall market reaction, because
it feels a little bit like
pricing in a potential policy error from the Fed, but I don’t understand
some of the sectors’ reactions today,” said Boston Partners’ Mullaney. Despite a Labor report number well outside
the consensus estimate, the overall reaction of investors was muted, continuing
a trend over the last year of a decoupling of significant S&P movement in
the wake of a wide miss on the payrolls report.
The
S&P 500 lost 1.52 points, or 0.03%, to 4,535.43 and the Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 74.73 points, or 0.21%, to 35,369.09. The Nasdaq Composite added
32.34 points, or 0.21%, to 15,363.52. For the week, the
S&P rose 0.6% and the Dow dipped 0.2%.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 8.37 billion shares, compared with the 8.99 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
The S&P 500 posted 50 new 52-week highs and one new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 123 new highs and 21 new lows.
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